The top 20 rip-offs of all time

Rebecca Rutt
by Lovemoney Staff Rebecca Rutt on 07 August 2012  |  Comments 55 comments

Birthday cards, takeaway pizza and train tickets are among our most hated rip-offs.

The top 20 rip-offs of all time

Paying full price for a train ticket when the journey is delayed and you have to stand up the whole way in a hot stuffy carriage is not only my idea of hell but also a total rip-off.

Of course there are ways to avoid paying these costs, but if you’ve got to get somewhere urgently, without prior-warning, there’s little option but to cough up for the over-priced ticket.

This is just one of the many rip-offs we all experience, but do things like paying out more than £10 to go to the cinema really annoy everyone else as much as it riles me?

Well, to answer the question Docmail, a print and post specialist, asked 2,000 people what they consider to be the biggest financial rip-offs. And while surveys like this need to be taken with a large pinch of salt, the results make for interesting reading.

Top rip-offs

Unsurprisingly, petrol, travel and food were all high up on the list. However, the single most annoying thing we get ripped-off by is paying an average of £3 for a birthday card. Paying for birthday presents at work also frustrates us with one in four people resenting work whiprounds.

We also rate takeaway pizzas, stamps and the price of alcohol in pubs as exceptionally poor value for money along with men’s jeans and printer cartridges.

Days out are also over-priced with premiership football matches for £45 and theme park tickets for £43 giving us another reason to complain.

In fact. out of everything we spend money on, only four in ten items proves to be value for money.

Good value for money

It’s not all bad news though and on the other end of the scale, sixteen parecetamol tablets for 19p was first in the best value for money items, with four pints of milk for £1.18 and a kettle for £22 coming in second and third respectively.

Apparently we’re also happy paying 69p for an iPhone app and £18 monthly broadband contract but what we hate most is paying for water and household essentials like gas and electricity.

How to avoid getting ripped-off

Some essentials, such as electricity and gas bills, are unavoidable. And although there are ways to lower your costs, such as switching providers and choosing direct debit payments, you can’t get away with avoiding these altogether.

However, for non-essential items, there are numerous ways to cut costs, from shopping around and finding a cheaper provider, to using modern technology to get a discount.

The key is being organised and well informed and using tips such as online videos and apps to save you money. Companies rely on apathy to rip-off their customers but by putting in a little extra time to research the market first, you can lower the risk of being ripped-off.

The top 20 rip-offs of all time

1. Birthday card – £3

2. Standard anytime return Bristol Temple Meads – London Paddington train ticket – £179

3. 30p toilet fee at a train station

4. Large takeaway pizza – £16.99

5. Two printer cartridges – £44

6. Theme Park ticket – £43.50

7. Medium glass of white wine purchased in pub – £5

8. Pair of men’s jeans – £40

9. Videogame for console – £45

10. Monthly cable television subscription – £48

11. Premiership football ticket – £45

12. Second class stamp -  50p

13. 3D Cinema ticket – £11.85 (inc. glasses)

14. Prescription charge – £7.65

15. First class stamp – 60p

16. One litre of petrol – £1.30

17. A pack of four razor blades – £8

18. Four toilet rolls – £2.38

19. Ladies haircut – £35

20. Pint of beer purchased in pub – £3.50

Do you agree with this list? Are there other things which are more of a rip-off? Let me know in the comment box below.

More on rip-offs:

The great car insurance rip-off

The biggest foreign currency rip-offs

Why budget airlines cost more than standard airlines

Expedia and Booking.com accused of hotel room price fixing

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Comments (55)

  • electricblue
    Love rating 653
    electricblue said

    The list is only based on perceived value and what people think the base costs are. People cheerfully pay pounds for detergents and cleaning chemicals which cost less than the containers they are in or buy items from retailers like B and Q for £5 which are on sale in the pound shops. Anyone thinking a prescription charge of £7.65 is a rip off is stupid beyond belief. So many of the items on the list are 'optional' purchases which can't be included in a rip-off list. If you are silly enough to pay £40 for a pair of jeans then who is the fool?

    Report on 08 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  3 loves
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 600
    Mike10613 said

    Whether it is a rip off depends on whether you are being held to ransom or not. Many people are held to ransom by high prescription charges. You don't really have a choice. You have some choice with petrol but often a cartel will exist and regulation needs to look at profits of petrol retailers. Getting charged £3 for a birthday card is a bit much, but you do have a choice. I get nice cards for 50p or less. The same applies to beer in the pub, you can buy it in the supermarket or just don't drink! Transport can be a problem and so petrol prices and rail fares can price you out of a job. I admit the price of paper products like toilet rolls seems to have shot up and they can't be avoided. I can see we all going back to hankies and newspaper like 70 years ago if it continues. You can choose not to buy kitchen roll though and cut down. Premier league footballs tickets at £45?That's just taking advantage of the mentally deficient. Even worse are tickets for the Olympics at £50... Really sad...

    I just checked how many of these I have bought over the past year. Just one, the petrol at 130 last week. I bought stamps before the price went up for 38p. I bought loo rolls last week, a dozen for 3.99. The rest of it, no thanks. Especially not football tickets!

    Report on 08 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • yocoxy
    Love rating 137
    yocoxy said

    From the Docmail website: "We love creating our own greetings cards using docmail's card designer!"

    Number one rip off in the Docmail survey: The price of traditional birthday cards.

    Hmmm..

    Still, it'll create a lively comments stream. Everything's a rip off, blame the Government, blame bankers! ;-)

    Oh and one of my pet hates: When did railway stations become train stations? I keep seeing and hearing that and it makes me cringe. They'll be choo-choo stations next.

    Report on 09 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  5 loves
  • PDB11
    Love rating 73
    PDB11 said

    I'm surprised people think that £40 for a pair of jeans is a rip-off. If I could buy a pair of trousers - of any description - to fit me, for less than £40, I'd stock up! I don't wear jeans, but my most recently purchased pair of trousers cost about 100€ plus alterations. And that's not even a good fit, because the cut was so wrong I had to buy two sizes too large...

    Likewise, 30p for a public loo wouldn't look such a rip-off to someone from Germany, where 50c is the minimum in most towns and motorway services, and 1€ is not uncommon.

    Car repairs and servicing has to be a rip-off, especially the cost of tyres. And drivers are being held to ransom over tyres, with no way to assess quality when choosing the brand.

    I also think £7 for a paperback book is a bit steep, although not as steep as it was back in the 1990s, when books were that price and the RPI was half today's figure.

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  • yocoxy
    Love rating 137
    yocoxy said

    All football fans are mentally deficient and we should all drink supermarket beer at home? Nice to see that the balanced debate has started..

    The real scandal about prescriptions is the fact that 88% of them are dispensed free of charge. The fee is only paid by employed adults (who are also the taxpayers subsidising the others).

    Report on 09 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • Hudges
    Love rating 5
    Hudges said

    House prices are by far the biggest rip- off. Because of that we are all slaves to the banks.

    Thomas Clarkson would have committed his life to undoing the damage to our economy and people's freedom that the house price hike scandal has caused.

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  • Hudges
    Love rating 5
    Hudges said

    Oh, and how can it make any sense for train fares to cost more than travelling by car with even only one passenger?

    Report on 09 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Bobski
    Love rating 20
    Bobski said

    Fixed line costs bug me...and before you say you dont have to have it, its part of my bundle and removing it doesnt actually help!

    Tell me why its cheaper to have a phone you can take and use anywhere in the UK, than it is to have a fixed one sitting there that still costs more when you use it?????

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  • russbiker
    Love rating 57
    russbiker said

    £22 for a kettle? Mine was £4.95 from Tesco, and it works fine!

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  • npharding
    Love rating 1
    npharding said

    Rip off at the moment ... inside the London 2012 Olympic venues ... a bottle of Coke (a major sponsor of the games) £2.30 each.

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  • electricblue
    Love rating 653
    electricblue said

    'Held to ransom by prescription charges' WHO exactly is held to ransom? Our prescription charges are dirt cheap and most people don't pay them anyway. Quarterly and Yearly season tickets for prescriptions are an option for those of us who do have to pay.

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  • Virginia
    Love rating 1
    Virginia said

    I save on the cost of food by never buying anything that has VAT added. Nearly everything that is made up of two or more ingredients is called as a confection and is VATted. So all biscuits, cakes, chocolate, take-away meals to be heated in a microwave, jams, crisps and all snacks have VAT added. Most of these things I don't need or can make myself, but I resent deeply having to pay VAT on tinned or packeted food for the cats.

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  • eMoov
    Love rating 2
    eMoov said

    What? No mention of estate agency fees??! ;-)

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  • peptroy
    Love rating 1
    peptroy said

    Vet consultancy fees are a rip off. £20-30 for a 15min consultation. Even then, if your animal needs to be seen after that to continue the treatment for a while, some still continue to charge the consultancy fee + the medication. This is totally wrong & a big rip off.

    Report on 09 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • thenikjones1
    Love rating 8
    thenikjones1 said

    £3.50 for pub beer is not a rip-off - being charged that much for a pint of Coke certainly IS! No incentive to be the designated driver - it is not even real Coke, more a soda stream-type mix.

    Report on 09 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • equitystake
    Love rating 3
    equitystake said

    Doubling the price of a Holiday because the kids are off school. Travel Agents you should be ashamed !!

    Report on 09 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • alexms
    Love rating 8
    alexms said

    we make all our greetings cards, bake biscuits / cakes etc 2-3 at a time as presents and for ourselves (my little girl loves doing both), go to tesco via Lidl,cycle into town instead of driving to the gym... and I can't think of the last time I sent a letter instead of an email. I'd consider home-brewing, growing a few veg, a bee hive etc if I lived in England full time. But I draw the line at Middle-Eastern lavatory paper...

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  • Aitken B
    Love rating 125
    Aitken B said

    There are many unavoidable rip-offs and, despite some jocular poking about it, most of the overpricing is the result of Government action or omission.

    Energy - Climate change levy to support totally useless wind farms and a privatisation that created a de facto cartel.

    Water - Privatisation that created a number of geographical monopolies with predictable results.

    Fuel - Tax on road fuel at 250-300% and rising

    Various so called regulatory bodies who protect the industry.

    e.g. the water industry alrady embarrassingly profitable “held down” to rises at only 6% above inflation and with a government supported business model that has the consumer paying in advance for capital investment.

    The same as with the so called “Climate Change Levy”.

    Prescription charges? The NHS is NOT free, we pay for it via our taxes. Prescription charges are merely and extra tax on the sic.

    Street Parking now, Road tolling to come = Being charged for using roads we have already hugely more than paid for.

    Then there are the other more direct costs extorted by Government – Taxes to pay for -

    MPs and some public employees very generous salaries and benefits plus gold-plated pensions we in the private sector have to pay for but cannot possibly get for ourselves.

    The huge waste of our money on various MPs' fanciful projects and lets not forget the NET £50m+ per day wasted on the EU.

    Certainly there are other players in this game but without doubt the biggest rip-off is Government, Local and Central.

    MPs are always keen to impose payment by results on other people. Perhaps they should be paid by results agreed on before they are elected. Out biggest problem would then be to calculate how much they owed us.

    Report on 09 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  4 loves
  • r
    Love rating 72
    r said

    Rip-offs? If you apply the rules of capitalism, the prices quoted are probably not rip-offs.

    For example, £40 for a pair of jeans! You can buy them in Matalan and George for a fiver; those shops that sell them for £40 must have buyers prepared to buy at £40. The right price is what a seller will sell for and a buyer will buy for.

    For example, £45 for a football ticket! Football matches on a Saturday attract hundreds of thousands of people; if they pay £45 to enable the player they are watching to be paid £1,000 for the match, it must be the correct price. If no-one attended the match because it was too expensive, the promoters and the players would have to reduce their price charge.

    For example, 4 toilet rolls for £2.38? Go to Aldi, Lidl or a pound shop. If you want a brand name printed on it and a particular colour and perfume, then that is the price. You don't HAVE to pay it, though.

    There is an alternative to every expensive item. If there is a problem, it lies with the customer. If he is willing to pay the price, the seller will charge the price.

    Where did common sense go?

    r.

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  • marram
    Love rating 47
    marram said

    @yocoxy - OH, how I agree with you! Train Station sounds so infantile. It's one of my particular bugbears, along with superfluous apostrophes and 'on behalf of' being used where 'on the part of' is the appropriate term.

    To the subject matter - I would never pay that price for toilet rolls, although the cheapest do not always work out as the most economical, I even check the yardage (metrage?) on my toilet rolls before making the purchase. I'm not a huge lover of own-brand items especially in the food area because I CAN tell the difference, although Aldi can be very convincing! We also have a shop in Spalding called Scooby-Doo and they are brilliant for paper items, cleaning, even tools and sundry stuff like pencils and paper for school. I will ALWAYS go there for household sundries, but I don't like to compromise on food, both my husband and I are fairly choosy in that area although if I can shop around I will. Major purchases such as white goods are truly a fix. If the price is lower, the delivery charge is higher. Plus, the choice of stores in which to buy them is getting smaller and smaller, the same as for computers! I look at Ebay stores especially the ones who use Ebay as an extra outlet - but watch out for terms and conditions eg who you deal with in the event of a problem as they often pass the responsibility to a third party.

    Cable TV? not even an option when you live in a village. Same with BT Infinity. Infinity in this instance means the time you have to wait for it to become available, never mind what price it is!

    I don't do birthdays because of my religion but if I need a card for a special occasion (wedding, wedding anniversary, new baby, baptism) I make my own.

    Unfortunately there is NOT always an alternative to expensive items. Hard to think of an alternative to water, or petrol, even, if you live in the country. So, all in all, I agree we live in a rip-off society and it's not always possible to avoid the rip-offs. But we can be aware and shop around.

    Report on 09 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • earthmother
    Love rating 5
    earthmother said

    @yocoxy - 'The real scandal about prescriptions is the fact that 88% of them are dispensed free of charge. The fee is only paid by employed adults (who are also the taxpayers subsidising the others).'

    I don't know where you got this idea from but you are wrong, I am on Incapacity benefit for heart disease, diabetes and going blind and DO NOT qualify for free prescriptions, so over £50 a month goes out for my medications.

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  • rojbalc
    Love rating 9
    rojbalc said

    Three words: mortgage arrangement fees.

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  • binkyscamp
    Love rating 1
    binkyscamp said

    To earthmother

    An annual pre paid prescription certificate(you can get online)would prob save you a fortune.

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  • jonnie2thumbs
    Love rating 95
    jonnie2thumbs said

    7. Medium glass of white wine purchased in pub – £5

    Wow!

    I get one and a half litres of white wine for €1.55 in Lidl which works out to be about six litres for £5

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  • marram
    Love rating 47
    marram said

    @binkyscamp - how does someone on incapacity benefit (haven't you had your ESA letter, earthmother?) pay a YEAR in advance for prescriptions? Do you know how little claimants get to live on? The sick are not getting rich at public expense. Unlike MPs.

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  • duncanw
    Love rating 1
    duncanw said

    3.50 for a pint in a pub and 10 quid for the cinema!?!?! go to tescos where a 4 pack of stella(pint cans) costs less than 6pounds and pick up a cheap dvd,go home and enjoy!!! also bag fees for budget airlines,card booking fees,tv licence,bottled water,the list goes on!!!

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  • easygoing
    Love rating 157
    easygoing said

    As I read the article I could easily guess the responses. Good debate though.

    My own rip off experience recently was that I urgently needed a screw eye and the nearest place to call was Homebase. I found them, a packet of 5 small ones for £3.50! First of all they would have cost a couple of pennies to make, and secondly things like that you usually need in pairs so if you wanted half a dozen then that would have been £7.

    Now normally I would have said **** it and gone elsewhere but time and distance precluded this. So I paid up on this occasion. However at least some of the staff a re embarrassed by the prices when I said 'Welcome to Rip Off Britain' at the till.

    Oh for the return of the good old fashioned ironmonger who would happily sell you one of anything.

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  • muira
    Love rating 30
    muira said

    you missed the three biggest rip offs..income tax,vat and national insurance!!!

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  • ruffley
    Love rating 1
    ruffley said

    erm @marram before you jump down binkyscamp's throat have you actually done any research into what she means?

    No thought not.

    NHS prepayment certificates cost just under £30 for a quarterly one or just over £100 for an annual one.

    As earthmother is paying £50 a month she would easily be able to afford a quarterly certificate making a saving of £120 over the three months, or a saving of £500 over the year. Try actually doing your research before being so quick to dismiss others' ideas.

    earthmother have a look at this link: http://www.nhsbsa.nhs.uk/1127.aspx

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  • Tanni
    Love rating 92
    Tanni said

    The biggest con job or rip off that is missing off the list is gangsterism. Yes our negligently corrupt government has used our taxpayer money that was allocated for pensions,NHS, Education (incl grants to uni students) and the list goes on has been used, sorry the correct term is stolen to bail out the thug banks and financial institutions without the need to consult the general public. in otherwords the powers that pretend to be in control know best for us all....this is so wrong and the biggest rip off to hit our shores since the wars for oil with a certain chemical weapon loving dictator from the middle east. Its about time some sense and logic was instilled into our government and now publicly owned banks. They rub it in further by taking our money and then having the cheek to not lend it back. This is gangsters at work and we cannot do anything about it. Now hows that saying go again: " you fool me once.."

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  • jedi44
    Love rating 33
    jedi44 said

    @jonnie2thumbs

    If you're paying €1.55 for a litre and a half of wine in Lidl then you are obviously not buying it in the UK where such a vast percentage of the cost is tax.

    My own personal bug-bear is the cost of food and drink charged by the franchises inside sports grounds. They have a captive clientele since no drink is allowed to be taken in these days. I can't afford the ticket prices any more but the last time I went to a rugby international, 3 years ago, I was charged £14 for 2 pints of flat beer and 2 pokes of chips.

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  • charles125
    Love rating 52
    charles125 said

    To REALLY put things in perspective, with this Government cutting benefits hard, they paid more to bail out the banks than has been paid out by governments over the entire UK history for science research.

    This is an extreme right wing government who could easily afford to reduce petrol/diesel tax given that Tony Blair and Gordon Brown introduced about 600 new taxes.

    Also note that the UK's national debt is comparatively small compared to most countries in the West.

    They are trying to con us all. Perhaps the biggest con of all after the US rigged 9/11 and Tony Blair saying Iraq had WMD.

    Conservatives / Con = CON

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  • garfsuncle
    Love rating 3
    garfsuncle said

    I can't believe that no-one has pointed out the biggest rip-off of all: bottled water at ANY price!

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  • thenikjones1
    Love rating 8
    thenikjones1 said

    Marram - I get my pre-pay prescription for £10.40 monthly (over 10 months I think) so Earthmother can easily afford this, and save £40 a month. For someone on benefits it is insane that they do NOT do this.

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  • wiliamson
    Love rating 4
    wiliamson said

    RENTS IN LONDON I and my husband lived in a good sized bed-sit which the landlord decided to "upgrade" to a one bedroom flat by building a wall down the middle and adding en-suite. Then he changed the electricity meter so that there was a standing charge of £2.50 per week, even when everything was turned off. So we ended up living in a shoe box, with surround sound noise from the road, a main artery into London, 24/7, and idiot neighbours. The cost of this squalor? Over £9,000 pa unavoidable accommodations costs. The average running costs of running a house, including mortgate.

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  • charles125
    Love rating 52
    charles125 said

    Please add in nuts at £25 a Kg !!!!!!

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  • hopefultom
    Love rating 44
    hopefultom said

    thenikjones1

    " £3.50 a pint is not a ripoff" I assume you live in the South-East as the average price of a good pint further North is almost £1 less than this

    Virginia

    For your information, most biscuits & cakes, all jams and some snacks are zero rated for VAT.

    All petfoods are vatable, but why not try switching to fresh food. I have dogs and give them a mix of boiled rice, eggs and fish ( river cobbler 6 fillets for a fiver ) with a tin of pilchards thrown in, plus some mixer biscuits. The price works out slightly cheaper than feeding them supermarket dogfood and they are a damned sight healthier.

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  • thenikjones1
    Love rating 8
    thenikjones1 said

    hopefultom - I have no idea how much a pint of beer costs, haven't been to a pub in ages and I am usually driving, hence my point (missed by you) that soft drinks are charged much the same as beer, which is a true rip-off. I am sure there is someone even more obtuse that will point out that even £2.50 is a rip-off, in Latvia it is 50p a litre ;-)

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  • hopefultom
    Love rating 44
    hopefultom said

    thenikjones1

    I did not miss the point that you were labouring; I, just did not choose to comment on it.

    Perhaps you would be good enough to explain how someone can make a statement " £3.50 for pub beer ( presumably a pint ) is not a rip-off " and follow it up with the statement " I have no idea how much a pint of beer costs " and still expect to be taken seriously.

    Obtuse....moi ??

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  • duncanw
    Love rating 1
    duncanw said

    the price of a pint varies drastically depending where you go/live,in croydon it`s 3.50 in weatherspoons but in central london with the same company it`s 4,however in the tourist spots in devon a friend got charged 4.60 for a pint of guiness in a pub in croyde!!!

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  • electricblue
    Love rating 653
    electricblue said

    @Charles125

    If you really think that the USA rigged 9/11 you are beyond decent debate. Are you a friend of David Icke by any chance? People spend far more on animal charities than they do on childrens' charities so can we therefore conclude that the balance of common sense and decency lies with the public at large?

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  • Tanni
    Love rating 92
    Tanni said

    Re bottled water; you tube fluoride in the water supply and a chap called dean birk. Check out the negatives of fluoride in the water supply. I advise that all people install fluoride filters at home and work.

    Check out a utube documentary called dumbing down of america. Short and to the point about problems with our food and water. Our food and water is not what it was like many years ago.

    Report on 13 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • yocoxy
    Love rating 137
    yocoxy said

    Tanni, did you know it was Bush who bombed the twin towers? or that they faked the moon landings? Scandalous huh?

    @earthmother. As others have said, I would recommend a season ticket for your medication. However, you stated that I was wrong and then didn't dispute my fact > 88% of prescriptions are dispensed free of charge. The fact that you pay for yours is not evidence to the contrary. In fact maybe there are many more like you who "should" have them free and then the number of us who pay would fall below 10%.

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  • poppasmurf
    Love rating 31
    poppasmurf said

    Paying VAT is more than enough TAX for the less well off, poor, those on benefits or if your wage is less than the average UK wage of £20K.

    Get the rich to pay there tax fairly.

    Make this country fair.

    This country is a rip off period.

    The only people whom this doesn't matter to are the rich.

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  • ronat42
    Love rating 62
    ronat42 said

    I am amazed that no-one has mentioned private pensions. Quite apart from everything else, how can anyone justify taxing my pension pot at 55%, when I die when I have never never benefited from more than 20% top up yet this is the same figure for those who have enjoyed 40% for most of their lives?

    This is on top of all of the other sticky fingered overpaid non productive "professionals" who have plundered the fund for the previous 40/50 years.

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  • thenikjones1
    Love rating 8
    thenikjones1 said

    hopefulton - you're not so much obtuse, as slow. I quoted the £3.50 price that had already been mentioned. DO I know if my local charges £3.50 or £3.00? No. I do know that pubs charge pretty much the same for sodastream-type coke as beer. If you can't understand my point, get an adult to help you :-)

    Report on 16 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Tanni
    Love rating 92
    Tanni said

    Lol yocoxy

    Re the twin towers, check out a certain Aaron Russo and his comments prior to 9/11 ( forgive the bad spelling of his name)

    This guy was not a conspiracy nut and neither a paranoid person. This guy was friends with the rich and influential.

    Also if you get time check out the comments of Jesse, ex wrestler, ex navy seal and US governor.

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  • hopefultom
    Love rating 44
    hopefultom said

    thenikjones 1

    I was just quoting your own, contradictory words back to you Nik.

    I would suggest, to you, that recourse to personal insults diminishes ones credibility in the world of adult debate; would you agree ?

    Have a nice weekend.

    Report on 17 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • PoohBah
    Love rating 19
    PoohBah said

    @earthmother: If you have diabetes and it is controlled by drugs (that is, not by diet alone) you should be able to get a medical exemption certificate entitling you to free prescriptions. Ask at your surgery for Form FP92A. Your doctor really should have offered it to you, as mine did.

    Report on 17 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • yocoxy
    Love rating 137
    yocoxy said

    @Tanni, ask an ex wrestler if you don't believe me! Hahaha!

    Can he also advise on the moon landing scandal? ;-) maybe you've got another YouTube friend who specialises in that one?

    Report on 20 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • elcadobes
    Love rating 10
    elcadobes said

    My top two are VAT and bottled water. I spent £4,50 at a restaurant recently for a bottle of water.

    For those who say go to Lidl, that can be very expensive if you live in the country miles away from supermarkets. It takes me about forty five minutes to get to Lidl's and so is pricey on petro (a real tax rip off)l, so it is actually cheaper for me to pay over £3 for loo paper in the local village shop.

    Report on 22 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Tanni
    Love rating 92
    Tanni said

    @yocoxy...this ex wrestler is also an ex navy seal, he was also a former governor. He is a hardcore patriot who loves and respects his country but cannot standby whilst the stench of corruption blocks the indepedent thinking of his fellow country men.

    But as you do not seem to read or research anything for yourself all I can say is that you keep munching on the big Macs and rely on controlled media propaganda which you call the news.

    Ps I find it hilarious a smart person such as yourself still needs information spoon feeding...suckling or chuckling.

    Report on 24 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • yocoxy
    Love rating 137
    yocoxy said

    Checking out Youtube videos is now considered 'research'?

    BTW, I don't eat a lot of Big Macs.

    Report on 07 September 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • wiliamson
    Love rating 4
    wiliamson said

    Being required to pay insurance and road tax for a car which is off-road.

    Report on 21 September 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • masser
    Love rating 0
    masser said

    I have an Epson Printer that continually invites me to order replacement ink cartridges. Sorry, I will never buy Epson branded inks whilst perfectly good ink is available online at £1.45 for 16ml. If there is a difference I have failed to see it.

    Report on 14 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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